the riaa owns the copyrights for the intellectual property (i.e. songs) of the bands/acts it represents...Quote:
Originally posted by clocker@6 September 2003 - 02:49
The RIAA doesn't own anything
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the riaa owns the copyrights for the intellectual property (i.e. songs) of the bands/acts it represents...Quote:
Originally posted by clocker@6 September 2003 - 02:49
The RIAA doesn't own anything
the riaa owns the copyrights for the intellectual property (i.e. songs) of the bands/acts it represents... [/b][/quote]Quote:
Originally posted by 3rd gen noob+5 September 2003 - 20:55--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (3rd gen noob @ 5 September 2003 - 20:55)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin-clocker@6 September 2003 - 02:49
The RIAA doesn't own anything
The RIAA doesn't represent any artists.
The RIAA is the industry mouthpiece for the actual media companies- Sony, Virgin, RCA, etc.
hmmm...this sounds like a matter of definitionQuote:
Originally posted by clocker@6 September 2003 - 03:00
The RIAA doesn't represent any artists.
The RIAA is the industry mouthpiece for the actual media companies- Sony, Virgin, RCA, etc.
Ya think?
You said that the RIAA "owns" copyrights.
They don't.
The clients that they front for own everything.
Maybe it is just nitpicking, but that is the basis of the law, isn't it?
is it not true though, that the riaa does actually manage some of the artists it represents?
Are you not reading me?
The RIAA represents zero artists, records zero music and owns zero copyrights.
The RIAA is a bunch of lawyers who are paid by the record companies ( who actually do all of the above mentioned) to represent them.
The thugs who are serving subpoenas and harrassing filesharers probably don't even know who eminem is.
youre allowed to use a certain amount of time (like 30 seconds or something) of a song without permission
@kurdt: You're allowed to listen to a piece of a song if and when it's made available through the artists site. Using it is something completely different and is, as far as I know, still illegal.
ask not what you can do for your country, ask what your country has done for you! Sharing your favourite music with the rest of the world is a loving thing.
The mp3s they share are 100% screechy.